Summary: An old
woman picks an unripe gourd that is bewitched. The green gourd chases her, thumping many on the head, until a young boy saves
the day.

Type: This is
a combination of a wonder and a beast tale.

Characters: The
characters are one-dimensional but funny. The old lady does not listen to prevailing folk wisdom about unripe gourds and pays
the price. Readers do not know much about the woman except that she is old, superstitious, a fast runner, willing to ask for
help, and a good cook. The panther, the fox, and the boy are just stand in caricatures – they could be any living creatures.
The other main character is the green gourd, which is vengeful, clever, and fast.

Setting: The
title notes that this tale is from North Carolina, and the illustrations make it clear that the location is in the mountains, probably in the western
Appalachian region. The author’s note tells
readers that this tale comes from Wautauga County, N.C., which is in Appalachia.
The story takes place a “long time back” (unpaged).

Plot: This is
a “chase” tale where the old woman is running from a “witchy” green gourd that wants to “fump”
her on the head (unpaged). In some ways, the plot reminds one ofThe Gingerbread Man, except the woman is being pursued rather than pursuing. The
woman asks two animals and a child for help, and the third helper (the child) succeeds.

Themes: One theme
seems to be that a person should listen to prevailing folk wisdom. Another theme is that a clever child can defeat a powerful
"other" when larger creatures fail.

Other Observations
– Language:The language is colorful and fun to read silently or aloud.
Hunter includes Appalachian dialect and expressions such as “Oh, law” and “A fractious green gourd’s
fixin’ to fump me good!” (unpaged).

Rating Considerations:
The text is folksy and charming. The illustrations remind me of Saturday cartoons. I grew tired of the illustrations by the
story’s end.

Illustrations:
Before illustrating The Green Gourd, the artist’s first book, Griego was
a greeting-card artist and a free-lance illustrator. His “greeting card” background is evident in the illustrations.
The watercolor cartoons are whimsical and humorous, and they contain plenty of action. However, they skimp on details. The
panther looks like a domestic cat, and readers never see the young boy’s eyes because his hair is in the way. In some
books, one can reexamine illustrations over and over and come away with something new each time. In this book, one would reread
for the story but probably not for the illustrations.